Hoffman v. Ford Motor Co.

587 N.W.2d 66, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 1374, 1998 WL 887181
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 22, 1998
DocketC5-98-949
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 587 N.W.2d 66 (Hoffman v. Ford Motor Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoffman v. Ford Motor Co., 587 N.W.2d 66, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 1374, 1998 WL 887181 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

SHUMAKER, Judge.

Appellants Daniel and Barbara Hoffman asserted claims of defective manufacture and breach of warranty against respondent Ford Motor Company as a result of a fire allegedly caused by their 1993 Ford Taurus. The trial court bifurcated the trial and first heard evidence as to notice, spoliation, and prejudice. After the first phase of the bifurcated trial, the court found that Daniel Hoffman’s telephone call to the dealer from whom he purchased the car was not a sufficient notice of a claim or breach. The trial court also found that important evidence had been de *68 stroyed, lost or altered, thereby causing prejudice to respondent. The court imposed the sanction of the exclusion of all testimony and evidence regarding the cause and origin of the fire derived from an investigation of the car and the fire scene. The court then dismissed the action because appellants could not prove any of their claims. In this appeal, appellants challenge the trial court’s findings as to notice, spoliation, and prejudice and its imposition of the sanction of exclusion of evidence. We affirm.

FACTS

When Daniel Hoffman returned home from work at 5:30 p.m. on January 19, 1993, he parked his new Ford Taurus automobile in the garage attached to his house. The garage also contained a Chevrolet Suburban vehicle, a tractor, gas-powered yard implements, firewood, fertilizer, motor oil, gasoline cans, trash and garbage containers, recycling bins, and storage cubes. About a half hour after his arrival, Hoffman became aware that the garage was on fire and he dialed 911.

As the responding fire crew fought the fire, deputy state fire marshal Thomas Neu-dahl investigated to determine the origin and the cause of the fire. He visually inspected the exterior and the interior of the garage and its various contents, and he took photographs, including one of the Taurus parked inside the garage. During its “overhaul” of the fire scene, the crew moved the Taurus outside the garage.

The next day, Hoffman reported the fire to his homeowners’ insurer. He then called Brookdale Ford, the dealer from whom he bought the Taurus, to cancel a service appointment and to request copies of the sales invoice, loan papers, and the warranty. He told a Brookdale employee that “my new Ford Taurus started on fire in my garage and burned my whole house down.”

A second fire erupted in the garage on January 21, 1993. Neudahl investigated again and observed that, although this fire extensively damaged the home, the garage area, burn patterns and debris from the first fire had not appreciably changed. It was on this day also that Brookdale Ford sent a fax message to Hoffman:

Dan^ — I have enclosed a copy of your loan and a copy of the original invoice. I also have enclosed a copy of an invoice for stock # 5470 which is the twin to your car, it is in my stock. 'I’ll call you this afternoon to discuss your options. I can’t tell you how sorry I feel about this unfortunate accident and stand ready to help in any way I can. Sincerely, Ed Schiff.

Hoffman’s telephone call and the fax reply were the only communications between appellants and Brookdale Ford about the fire. Appellants never contacted respondent about the fire.

Appellants’ insurer retained fire investigator George Wiestling to make an origin and cause determination of the fire. He inspected the scene on January 22, 1993, conducted tactile tests, and took photographs. The insurer retained a second investigator, Don Peterson, who inspected the scene and the Taurus on February 9, 1993. Sometime thereafter, the Taurus was taken to a salvage yard, and on May 24, 1993, the garage and home were demolished. As of this time no one had made any investigation of the scene or the Taurus on behalf of respondent.

Appellants commenced their lawsuit against respondent on February 7, 1994. Respondent retained fire investigator Walter Newell in July 1994, and he inspected the Taurus in the salvage yard during the fall of that year. Jack Ridnour, respondent’s vehicle fire investigator, also inspected the Taurus at the salvage yard in November, 1994.

The parties appeared for a pretrial conference before the Honorable David M. Duffy in November, 1996. At that time respondent moved for spoliation sanctions against appellants for having destroyed the fire scene and its contents and for having altered the Taurus before respondent was given an opportunity to inspect. Judge Duffy ruled that the appropriate sanction would be an “inference instruction” to be given to the jury after the testimony of appellants’ first fire expert and then again in the final charge:

If you determine that the plaintiffs or their agents failed to notify Ford before the scene of the fire was demolished, you may infer that the scene of the fire would *69 have revealed evidence unfavorable to the plaintiffs.

Before he could start the trial, Judge Duffy was transferred to another court division, and the case was reassigned to the Honorable Charles A. Porter, Jr. Appellants then moved for a reconsideration of Judge Duffy’s spoliation ruling. Judge Porter focused on how to implement Judge Duffy’s instruction, listened to arguments, and ruled that he would bifurcate the jury trial.

Judge Porter presented the parties with three options as to the bifurcated trial. Under the first option, the jury in the first phase would decide whether or not the spoliation of evidence was prejudicial enough to trigger an application of the spoliation inference. Once the jury resolved that issue, the trial would proceed to the second-phase issues, with or without the spoliation inference. The second option provided that the first-phase issue would be tried'to the court and the second-phase issues to the jury. The third option allowed offers of proof through testimony on the first-phase issue. The parties agreed to the second option.

Judge Porter informed the parties that in the first phase he would determine whether or not the inference should actually be applied to the ease. Appellants objected and argued that Judge Porter had authority only to determine whether or not the jury in the second phase would be given Judge Duffy’s instruction. Judge Porter disagreed and presided as fact-finder in the first phase of the bifurcated trial.

The evidence consisted of testimony from Daniel Hoffman, Thomas Neudahl, George Wiestling, Walter Newell, and Jack Ridnour, numerous photographs, and some tangible exhibits. All of the experts agreed that the best evidence of the origin and the cause of a fire is the fire scene itself, including the exterior and interior of buildings, the contents of such areas, burn patterns, residuals of combustibles, and fire debris. No expert believed that an adequate investigation could be conducted based solely on photographs taken by others. The experts agreed that an investigator relies on multiple senses in fire inspections as he looks at, smells and touches various areas and items.

Each expert stated an opinion as to the origin of the fire. Neudahl and Wiestling placed the origin somewhere inside the Taurus. Newell and Ridnour testified that it started in an area of the garage in front of the Taurus.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
587 N.W.2d 66, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 1374, 1998 WL 887181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-ford-motor-co-minnctapp-1998.